Legislators Strip Marijuana Bill, Replace With Dead Permitless Carry Legislation
- By Taylor Wooten, TheStatehouseFile.com
- Sen. Greg Taylor, D-Indianapolis, questions Major Rob Simpson of the Indiana State Police on the changes to Senate Bill 209, which would strip the original bill and replace it with handgun permit legislation originally in House Bill 1077. The legislation received pushback previously from law enforcement, including ISP Superintendent Doug Carter.INDIANAPOLIS—As time and bill numbers dwindle on the 2022 session of the Indiana General Assembly, some legislators are flip-flopping legislation to give a permitless carry bill another chance.
Republican conference committee members are pushing to make Senate Bill 209, regarding drug schedules and delta-8 THC, the new home for the deceased House Bill 1077, which would get rid of handgun permits.
“Last minute, we’re stripping [SB] 209 and putting [HB] 1077 in,†Pol said. “Pretty much just ignoring—at this point if we were to move forward—all of that, I think very, very relevant and very well-thought-out testimony as to what we’re essentially doing with [HB] 1077.â€
The handgun bill died in the Senate Rules and Legislative Procedures Committee after being amended in the Senate Judiciary Committee. The amendment removed the language repealing the permit requirement and would have allowed permit applicants to have provisional licenses to carry while awaiting results.
If the lawmakers in the conference committee get the required sign-offs from their respective caucuses, the bill would reflect the House version of HB 1077, which would allow Hoosiers not prohibited from possessing a firearm to carry a handgun without a license.
Rep. Matt Pierce, D-Bloomington, said it seemed like the gun legislation was a priority over the delta-8 legislation. Bill author Sen. Mike Young, R-Indianapolis, said he would find a way to work it into a different bill.
Sen. Greg Taylor, D-Indianapolis, was disappointed that the conference committee would not be hearing testimony at Wednesday’s meeting. Committee Chairman Sen. Eric Koch, R-Bedford, said this was because the bill would be replaced with HB 1077, which received nine hours of testimony in the Senate Judiciary Committee.
Because of this, Taylor asked people interested in testimony to stick around after the adjournment of the committee meeting.
Rep. Ragen Hatcher, D-Gary, said she was concerned about what the bill could mean for the state.
“I don’t want to call it the Wild West,†Hatcher said. “I hope it doesn’t look like that, but I’m definitely concerned about what society could turn into because of it.â€
Simpson said the Indiana State Police are also concerned and the bill would add a layer of insecurity to all citizens and law enforcement.
“We’re going to see a lot more people in Walmart open carrying,†Simpson said.
If the amendment to SB 209 receives signatures of support from the four conferees, it is eligible for consideration by both the Senate and the House after review by the rules committees of both chambers. If any of the conferees would not support the change in the bill, legislative leaders have the option of replacing them with another House or Senate member who would support the change.
Pol expressed doubt that his caucus, the Senate Democrats, would OK the bill.
“But at the end of the day, I mean, we’re ultimately gonna have to take this back to our caucus,†Pol said. “Here, this is something that, you know, this is a major, major shift.â€
Can’t speak for anyone else, but if any legislator representing Posey County does anything to pass a marijuana bill of any kind, I will be all over it. We’ve got enough drugged up people running around and miscreants selling drugs that attests to the detrimental effect of this drug and all the others our young people are being introduced to. I have not heard anything directly from our legislators on this, but I will be getting in touch with them within the week and find out their feelings and whether they are receiving contributions from these drug groups. Kill the marijuana bill.
Wouldn’t a marijuana bill help with “miscreants†selling drugs. People would be buying from safe and regulated businesses.
Wouldn’t “young people†find it harder to buy if it was regulated. Because drug dealers sure as sh*t don’t care if you’re 21.
Just keep blabbering on with your boomer mentality, drink some more of your dangerous drug.
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